The Realm of Fortune (1986) Poster

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8/10
acting by Cruz and Guerra is powerful, yet controlled... a wonderful chemistry
vernoncoffee26 February 2009
Warning: Spoilers
A classic tale about the allure of wealth to the poor, whose enticement can lure them away from everyman's birthright, self-respect, appreciation of family, and the enjoyment of simple pleasures. The director, Arturo Ripstein, while restrained in dialog and acting, uses details in his settings to powerfully suggest to the audience what they will soon discover from the actors themselves.

* minor spoiler*

I don't know why it has no professional reviews listed, it is a fine little gem of a film. Not in the sense of length, running 2 hours, but in the sense of a simple, yet potent story. It is set in rural Mexico, where we see the average person living a squalid life, even a much admired large house of a successful gambler who is farther along on the conveyor belt of success, looks dirty and disheveled from the outside, and has a earth floor and unattractive furnishings on the inside. We visit several small town farmers markets/fairs that must be on the entertainers D-list, meaning Desperate; one food vendor, one band and singer, a few rides; the biggest attraction is a hosted cock fight, many of the roosters brought by the local residents.

Dionisio Pinzón (Ernesto Gómez Cruz) is a poor, middle aged man living in a one room, earth wall shack with his infirm mother. It is late in the night, Dionisio and his mother are both sleeping in blankets on the dirt floor, next to an empty, gleaming brass bed with new bedding. The light that fills the darkness is a bizarre red, like the inside of a film darkroom, which we discover is from a large, buzzing, Christmas wreath you might find in a commercial bar, hanging high on one wall. We have no hint why they choose to sleep on the floor or whether it is near Christmas time, and we never find out, but what is suggested, is there are strong cultural cross-currents at work. Dionisio is enticed with what he thinks represents money & success in an obvious, nouveau rich way. Yet after a long string of good fortune, what he pursues invariably disappoints him.

His co-star, La Caponera, (Blanca Guerra) is also on a journey of mis-fulfilment; she was an orphan who came of age already on the move, living by her wits and her attraction. Like Dionisio, she is searching too, not for money, but a secure relationship, and like Dionisio, she chooses the illusion of what she wants, rather than the real thing, to her deep disappointment.

The acting by both Cruz and Guerra is powerful, yet controlled and there is a wonderful chemistry pairing Dionisio's timid hunger and La Caponera's playful sensuality; however the film is for those who can appreciate a slow revelation of character, subtle humor, and a distinctly different cultural setting.

coreydv, 2009, Feb
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7/10
Epic story of the struggle to appreciate good things of life.
bigrichry26 June 2006
A very poor, crippled man barely ekes out a living while his mother attempts to care for him. He is given a crippled cock to eat, but nurses it to health and some success in fighting. He rejects the offer of a professional gambler to win illegally. The gambler defeats him and then becomes his mentor in cock fighting and cards. A Mexican Ava Gardner sings in the settings where he is and lives with the gambler. Eventually she leaves the gambler, taking his luck to the poor man who then is vary successful materially, but never emotionally. One dramatic sexual scene and later a more degraded one. A daughter from infancy until early adulthood. A primitive life well portrayed. A story to see repeatedly.
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9/10
lady luck
RanchoTuVu18 June 2004
Dionisio lives with his mother in a hut, and makes his living as a crier in his town. He carries a little drum and two sticks in a little box made of small branches. He takes out his drum and sticks and stands teetering on the tiny box, and shouts announcements while beating on his drum. Obviously, he doesn't make much doing this. His luck changes when he is hired to announce the coming of a carnival to the village, and is recruited to emcee a cock fight. The winning rooster is badly enough hurt that its owner wants to kill it, but Dionisio persuades the owner to let him have the injured bird, which as it turns out can still fight, and goes on to win a couple of more matches, and also makes Dionisio much richer, before finally losing, i. e. getting killed. Through this exposure to gaming, Dionisio becomes a different person. His luck becomes intertwined with a woman he meets, and eventually wins over, who sings with a group at the carnavals where the cockfights take place, and is known as la Caponera, though her real name is Bernarda. Their relationship takes them into one of the most passionate sex scenes ever, but cools (at least on his part). Like he did with his mother before, Dionisio neglects Bernarda, but this time with tragic consequences.

Fantastically filmed in gaudy color, with great attention to the details of its location and characters, this is a film not to be overlooked.
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9/10
A fine movie
rsnunez9 March 2001
This is a fine adaptation of one of the few stories of Juan Rulfo, a fine Mexican novelist who, unfortunately wrote only a handful of pieces.

The movie does a fine job in translating a very complex story about a professional cock-fight trainer and gambler who, after a twist of fate, finds his luck, both good and bad, in a beautiful female singer portrayed by gorgeous Blanca Guerra at her best.

As usual, movie adaptations of novels lost a lot of the original richness, but even taking into consideration that loss, this movie makes a wonderful job in portraying not only the cockfighting and gambling world in rural Mexico, but also in reflecting and criticizing the society involved in such practices.

Not only that, see after the multilayered role of Blanca Guerra as Bernarda, La Caponera. First, her relations with the cockfighters-gamblers. Then, the relation with her daughter.

Arturo Ripstein's used real locations in central rural Mexico, so the movie has a real-life feel. Some shots are Eisenstein's like, although since it was filmed in color it is hard to fully appreciate them.
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Read the original
lullaby169816 June 2007
In only a few cases a movie es able to surpass the book it is based on. This, is definitely NOT the case. The book, originally written by Rulfo is very close to his most famous stories from "El llano en llamas". His stories are paintings of sorts which show a part of the old rural México. People enthralled in traditions, poor people, people of the land, yet not less complex than any urban sophisticated character. His characters were motivated by the love of the land, and haunted by the demons of their choices and mistakes. In the book she is shown as a woman who fears monotony and anonymity in her lifetime. He believes that all happiness and thus all sense of meaning resides in pleasing his wife. They are driven by culture, by tradition, by the land... and in the end losing whatever material things they have in life means nothing after having lost themselves, and hope. Yet somehow, Ripstein simplifies all of this: she has to be driven by pure greed, he's just a macho compulsive gambler. It's about sex, and greed and profits. They turn out to be vulgar, and nothing could be further from what the great Rulfo wrote. In his search for realism, Ripstein makes life look like a sad succession of trivial events: eat, drink, f**k, f**k up and die. Stay away from Ripsteins movies... they all turn out to be the same.
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1/10
Long, Dull, Predictable
Psychic_htz13 March 2003
The worst thing about this film is its length. It just doesn't end. It goes on and on.... and on. Many movies that exceed 2hrs don't feel too long, but this one really does. You see, the trouble is that the events in El Imperio de la fortuna unfold very slowly. And when they do happen it isn't exciting. Not even a little bit because it is exactly what you would have predicted to happen 20mins earlier. It has all the imagination of a paper weight, in the shape of a paper weight. The entire movie plot could be written on the side of a folded napkin.

All the characters are so dumb you feel no sympathy for any of them. "Can't you see what's going to happen to you if you continue along this path!!", I hollered at the TV screen on more than one occasion. Also hollered was: "Why are you doing that?", "What's that got to do with the movie?!" & "Get on with it!!".

Never before has such frustration been felt whilst watching a film. If there wern't subtitles to keep my eyes open I would surely have fallen asleep on the couch. I couldn't more highly unrecommend this movie 1/10.
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